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Abstract: Wide-Field Retinal Hemodynamic Imaging with the Tracking Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope

R. Daniel Ferguson, Daniel X. Hammer, Ann E. Elsner, Robert H. Webb, Stephen A. Burns, "Wide-Field Retinal Hemodynamic Imaging with the Tracking Scanning Laser Ophthalmoscope ," Optics Express 12 (21) , 5198-5208 (18 October2004).

Article: 453 kB

Reprinted by permission of the Optical Society of America. For permission to copy or republish, contact the Optical Society of America, 2010 Massachusetts Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20036-1023.

Abstract

Real time, high-speed image stabilization with a retinal tracking scanning laser ophthalmoscope (TSLO) enables new approaches to established diagnostics. Large frequency range (DC to 19 kHz), wide-field (40-deg) stabilized Doppler flowmetry imaging was demonstrated in initial human subject tests. The fundus imaging method is a quasi-confocal line-scanning laser ophthalmoscope (LSLO). The retinal tracking system uses a confocal reflectometer with a closed loop optical servo system to lock onto features in the ocular fundus and automatically re-lock after blinks. By performing a slow scan with the laser line imager, frequency-resolved retinal perfusion and vascular flow images were obtained free of eye motion artifacts. Normal adult subjects and patients were tested with and without mydriasis to characterize flow imaging performance.

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